Posted by Doctor Killjoy
a resident of Sylvan Park
on Apr 26, 2011 at 11:38 pm

SETI was just a waste of time anyway, and a total financial boondoggle, to say the least. We have bigger problems we need to solve here on Earth first, before we'll ever be ready to welcome anyone from "out there". And we are no where near mature enough as a planet to have any business making any sort of contact.

No way. To think otherwise is to be ignorant and arrogant. On a planet that can't decide definitively whether we're descended from apes or some so-called "godly creation", we aren't even close, by a long shot.

Right now, we're just galactic background noise, of no consequence whatsoever to any "higher" civilization, if it exists. And if *this* (us, here on Earth) is *it*, then we are royally fouled up to the maximum.

Posted by Konrad M. Sosnow
a resident of another community
on Apr 27, 2011 at 2:15 pm

Are we alone? is a question that many have pondered for generations. Pure research, basic research, or fundamental research is research carried out to increase understanding of fundamental principles. Many times the end results have no direct or immediate commercial benefits: pure research can be thought of as arising out of curiosity.

The Bay Area has long been home to basic research. SLAC,NASA, Stanford, CAL, and UC Santa Cruz are known for their research. Many Nobel prizes have been won by local scientists.

Posted by SETI Member
a resident of another community
on Apr 28, 2011 at 1:30 am

@allen: Maybe UC Berkeley, the feds, etc. had told SETI that they'd sponsor the array if it were built, I don't know. I don't think Paul Allen would have funded it if they hadn't been fairly sure of a revenue source for operating costs  which they had, for a while.

@group: I see my own (tiny) financial contribution to SETI as that one very small portion of one's income that should be placed in a long-odds but potentially-large-payout investment. In this case, very long odds but a potentially very large payout.

@Dr. Killjoy: We may not be in a position to communicate with the aliens, anyway. If their signal comes from, say, a million light-years away, it'll take our response a million years to get to them, and both our civilization and theirs will probably be unrecognizable. What we may gain is knowledge that is transmitted in their signal. Even if they're relatively close by, there will probably be a (lengthy) debate about what and whether to reply, and/or a multiplicity of replies from a variety of people/governments. I think that any civilization smart enough to send us a message will be smart enough to investigate carefully any replies they get from us, and not make too many assumptions.

Posted by hank wong
a resident of Whisman Station
on Apr 28, 2011 at 2:41 pm

Per Dr. Killjoy, while we may not be actually 'communicate' with the aliens due to the vast time and space, but imagine what new perspective we will gain when we detect a signal from another civilization. During the 60's, the Earth rise photo taken from the moon gave the human race a new perspective of our world and started many one-world initiatives such as Earth Day and the Green movement.

Posted by Dick Guertin
a resident of Cuesta Park
on Apr 28, 2011 at 8:17 pm

The Milky Way Galaxy is about 100,000 Light-Years across. A Light-Year is a distance, and it's how far a light beam, or radio signal, travels through space in one year. There are 200 billion stars in the Milky Way, and only 24 are within a 12-Light-Year sphere around our Sun. The vast majority are over 150 Light Years away from us. Now, put yourself on a planet circling one of those stars, as close as 150 Light Years away. What do they hear from Earth? NOTHING. We've existed here for thousands of years, but we only started sending radio signals around 1900. We've been transmitting for 111 year, so those radio signals have made it 111 Light Years into space, not far enough to reach that planets 150 Light Years away. So they don't hear us, and if they started sending radio signals when we started, we don't hear them either. Furthermore, the farther away we listen, the farther back in time we travel. A signal sent from a planet 1000 Light Years away would take 1000 years to reach us. What would we do about it? Not much. Any response would take 1000 year to get back to them, and after a 2000 year round trip, who would be listening? Also, a radio signal disperses as it travels through space. Compared to the "noise" our Sun produces, our faint radio signal gets destroyed by the Sun before it leaves our Solar System.

So, SETI is a waste of money. Sorry, but we've got better thing to do with that money than scan the skies.